The airstrikes were "ongoing," the official said without providing details. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because the attacks had not yet been officially announced.
An Associated Press correspondent in Tikrit reported hearing warplanes overhead late yesterday, followed by multiple explosions.
Iraq began the Tikrit ground offensive in early March without requesting US air support, even as it welcomed help from Iran.
In an address to the nation yesterday evening, Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi predicted success in Tikrit but did not say the US was providing airstrikes.
Al-Abadi praised all the groups involved in the battle against the Islamic State group, including the so-called Popular Mobilization Forces, which the US calls Iranian-backed militias, the Sunni tribes and coalition forces. But he fell short of confirming that the coalition is playing a direct role in Tikrit.
US airstrikes in Tikrit raise highly sensitive questions about participating in an Iraqi campaign that has been spearheaded by Iraqi Shiite militias trained and equipped by Iran, an avowed US adversary.
Recently, the offensive has lost momentum. Colonel Steve Warren, a Pentagon spokesman, said yesterday the Iraqi forces have encircled Tikrit but not yet made significant inroads into the heavily defended city limits.
"They are stalled," he said.
The US has hundreds of military advisers in Iraq helping its security forces plan operations against the Islamic State, which occupies large chunks of northern and western Iraq. But the US has said it is not coordinating any military actions with the Iranians.
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